Find Your Next Car – Perhaps you’re not quite sure which vehicle is right for you? Use our Research and Reviews sections to help you decide. We have a team of experts working to bring you useful tips and advice, car reviews and tools. Explore your options, and when you’ve narrowed it down, be sure to connect with one of our Certified Dealers.

Car Pro Reviews – Enjoy our most recent new vehicle test drives and reviews OR… Click on a brand you love or one you’d love to get to know better. Either way, you’ll get to ride along with a Car Pro for “Straight Talk and Honest Answers.”

Certified Dealership Program – We have carefully selected dealers in certain cities who share our vision to provide the best car buying experience possible. Use our Dealer Locator by brand and distance, or click on the city closest to you.

Vehicle Inventory Search – If you are in the market for a specific New or Used car, check out our Quick Search to find inventory available from a Car Pro Certified dealer near you! If you find a new car, don’t forget to snag your VIP Certificate before you head that way.

NHTSA To Expand Takata Recall; GM Adds Vehicles To List

The already massive recall involving faulty Takata air bags will be getting even bigger soon, as U.S. regulators prepare to add more automakers to the list.

Right now, the recall involves 11 automakers, but according to NBC News, seven more carmakers, including Tesla, could be added to the list shortly. We’ll find out which automakers those are this Thursday, when the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration holds a public meeting to update the progress of the unprecedented recall.

Monday, NHTSA Administrator Mark Rosekind told reporters that his agency will disclose new automakers impacted by the recall.

“It goes beyond the 11,” says Rosekind, who met with automakers and suppliers affected by the Takata recall over the summer.

“It is expected that the scope of the current Takata recalls may expand as time goes on and will likely grow to include vehicles that are outside the scope of the current recalls,” the letters said.

The air bag inflators, which can explode with too much force and send metal shrapnel flying into passenger compartments, are now linked to at least eight deaths and more than 100 injuries worldwide. Experts believe the ammonium nitrate used as a chemical accelerator in the inflators could become unstable after being exposed to high humidity over a period of time.

Meanwhile, over the weekend, GM recalled about 400 vehicles in the United States after being notified by Takata that tests at a production plant in Mexico showed failures of side air bags. The Takata tests were performed on Oct. 5, and it notified GM the following day.

The GM recall affects six models built earlier this year, including the 2015 Chevrolet Equinox, Chevrolet Malibu, Chevrolet Camaro, Buick LaCrosse, Cadillac XTS and GMC Terrain. No injuries or deaths have been reported in this specific recall, a GM spokesman said.